Part 1 of Jerry Quarry Documentary (Leading Heavyweight Boxer from 1970's)

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  • čas přidán 3. 07. 2020
  • Part two is at • Part 2 of Jerry Quarry...
    Jerry Quarry is 'one of the greatest' as he fought Muhammad Ali twice and Joe Frazier twice. The only man to do so.
    Jerry Quarry fought in "The Golden Age Of Heavyweight Boxing", where the talent level of the sport and its level of international interest were at a peak.
    Anyone seriously considering being a boxer should see • Video
    Jerry Quarry (1945 - 1999), nicknamed "The Bellflower Bomber", was an American heavyweight boxer. During the peak of his career from 1968 to 1971, Quarry was rated by Ring magazine as the most popular fighter in the sport. His most famous bouts were against world champions Floyd Patterson, Jimmy Ellis, Joe Frazier, Muhammad Ali and Ken Norton.
    Quarry had over 200 fights in his amateur career. He turned professional in 1965 and finished with a record of 53-9-4, with wins over some of the best heavyweights of his era. Quarry was undersized compared to many of his rivals, but very durable and had a great left hook. A recurring problem was that he would sustain cuts easily, which caused many of his fights to be brought to an end. He retired from boxing in 1975, but had comeback fights in 1977, 1983 and 1992.
    Towards the end of his life the punishment sustained in his boxing career caused Quarry to become a shell of himself. He developed chronic traumatic encephalopathy and required assistance to perform everyday tasks. He was inducted into the World Boxing Hall of Fame in 1995, where he gave a slurred speech. He died in 1999, at the young age of 53.
    Quarry was from an Irish American family of agricultural laborers in California. His younger brothers Mike and Bobby Quarry also boxed. Mike was a high-ranked contender in the light heavyweight division Jerry's older brother James was the only Quarry brother not to box. James became a carer for Jerry and set up the Jerry Quarry Foundation, a non-profit that assists disabled boxers.
    When he returned in 1983, he was 38 years old. Though appearing to be in good health, Quarry was in fact already beginning to show the effects of his lengthy boxing career. A Sports Illustrated reporter was researching an article about health problems among retired boxers, especially among those who started as child boxers. The reporter met Quarry, and although he appeared to be in good health, Quarry's performance on several simple cognitive tests was shockingly poor. This was the harbinger of the mental decline that would eventually destroy the last part of his life, dementia pugilistica, the atrophy of the brain from repeated blows to the head, eventually leading to an Alzheimer's-like state. A 1983 CT scan of Quarry's brain done for the article and agreed to by him, showed classic evidence of brain atrophy, including the characteristic cavum septi pellucidi found in many boxers with long careers. Despite these developing facts, Quarry had two wins in 1983, but the fights accelerated his mental decline.
    He retired again and was inactive as a boxer from 1984 to 1992, but Quarry continued to decline physically and mentally. His entire boxing fortune completely gone by 1990, Quarry filed for Social Security at age 45. Denied a boxing license in many states because of his condition, Quarry found a loophole in Colorado that allowed him to schedule an October 30, 1992 bout with Ron Cramner, a cruiserweight 16 years Quarry's junior. At age 47 years and 6 months old, Quarry provided nothing more than a 6-round punching bag for the younger fighter, losing all six rounds and the decision. Only Quarry's courage and great chin let him last the full 6 rounds. Quarry was never the same after that fight.
    Within a few years of his final bout Quarry was unable to feed or dress himself and had to be cared for by relatives, mainly his brother James, the only one of the four Quarry brothers not to box professionally. Jerry's brother, Mike, who had contended for the light-heavyweight championship, was himself beginning to show signs of dementia pugilistica in later life and died as a result on June 11, 2006. Another brother, Bobby, suffers from Parkinson's disease, believed to be the result of his own heavyweight boxing career. Jerry Quarry was inducted into the World Boxing Hall of Fame in 1995. A television news broadcast of the event showed him barely aware of the proceedings, the dementia he suffered now severe. Quarry was hospitalized with pneumonia on December 28, 1998, and then suffered cardiac arrest. He never regained consciousness and died on January 3, 1999 at the age of 53. His body was interred at Shafter Cemetery in Shafter, California in the United States of America. A foundation was established in his honor to his boxing-related dementia.
    Muhammad Ali (1942 - 2016) was an American professional boxer, activist, and philanthropist.
    #boxer #boxing #dementia
    There is a Jerry Quarry website at sites.google.com/view/boxing-...
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Komentáře • 15

  • @BoxingHallofFameJerryQuarry

    Part two is at czcams.com/video/8WWz-8MtsJc/video.html

  • @NJ-gb2iv
    @NJ-gb2iv Před 3 lety +4

    JERRY YOUR A WINNER IN ALL THE WAYS THAT COUNT 224💪R.I.P

  • @jerryblair2339
    @jerryblair2339 Před 3 lety +2

    Jerry Ouarry what a great Heavy Weight he never won it but he deserves to be The Heavy Weight Champ of The World tough ruthless all business in the ring.

  • @johnyerkov1553
    @johnyerkov1553 Před 3 lety +5

    Such an exciting fighter he took down Ron Lyle and also Earnie Shavers

  • @JosephMiller-hu7bq
    @JosephMiller-hu7bq Před měsícem

    How Jerry fought more like how he ate punches was very ROCKY like and he would get cut and the REF would stop the fight , or when he would figjt a hard hitter he would get stopped dropped but he did good in the greatest area of boxing for Heavies think back

  • @jujones11
    @jujones11 Před 2 lety +7

    The only fighter George Foreman ever ducked.. that speaks volume

    • @joshuatree5620
      @joshuatree5620 Před 2 lety +1

      Quarry would of had the same problem Frazier did,not being able to get close to Foreman without getting hammered.

    • @brucemedley635
      @brucemedley635 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@joshuatree5620quarry beat massive punchers shavers,lyle,foster and foreman admitted he avoided quarry after he ko'd shavers in 1

    • @marleywills2160
      @marleywills2160 Před 9 měsíci

      Jerry Quarry beat hard punchers. He was quicker than Foreman with his hands so he would be able to time his rhythm. Counter punchers usually beat punchers...Jimmy Young (out fighter, counter puncher) Jerry Quarry (brawler, counter puncher).

  • @loghawgtv
    @loghawgtv Před 4 lety

    “Two bull moose in heat”.... I think he meant “rut” 😜

  • @vincentfisher1603
    @vincentfisher1603 Před 3 lety

    According to Len Drury, a commentor on CZcams, Quarry was a drunken bum. What do the rest of you feel about his comment?

    • @rubenaerts7284
      @rubenaerts7284 Před 2 lety +1

      That len is obviously a moron.

    • @TheBatugan77
      @TheBatugan77 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Who or what is a len drury?

    • @ralphcantrell3214
      @ralphcantrell3214 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@TheBatugan77 Ya, I never heard of the fellow. But usually when someone is talking trash about someone else, it is just an attempt to make themselves look better. Ol' Len must be the real bum.